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The following list ranks the number-one best-selling fiction books. Only four books topped the list that year, the list being dominated for 34 weeks by John le Carré's spy novel The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. The prolific novelist Louis Auchincloss had his only No. 1 bestseller that year (and only for one week at the top, though it lasted ...
Those Calloways is a 1964 American family drama film, adapted from the 1950 children's novel Swiftwater by Paul Annixter. The film was produced by Walt Disney and directed by Norman Tokar. It was the last credit for veteran film composer Max Steiner. [3] It stars Brian Keith, Vera Miles, Brandon deWilde, Walter Brennan, Ed Wynn and Linda Evans.
The novel was published in book form on October 22, 1962, and was then adapted into a 1964 film of the same name directed by Sidney Lumet and starring Henry Fonda, Dan O'Herlihy, and Walter Matthau. In 2000, the novel was adapted again for a televised play , broadcast live in black and white on CBS .
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Lloyd Alexander – The Book of Three [10] Rev. W. Awdry – Mountain Engines (nineteenth in The Railway Series of 42 books by him and his son Christopher Awdry) Nina Bawden – On the Run (also Three on the Run) Christianna Brand – Nurse Matilda; Hesba Fay Brinsmead – Pastures of the Blue Crane; Jeff Brown – Flat Stanley
Books written or published in the year 1964. Books portal; 1960s portal; 1959; 1960; ... List of The New York Times number-one books of 1964; A. Adding a Dimension; C ...
In 1964, Pan Books published a novelisation of the film by the author John Burke, described as "based on the original screenplay by Alun Owen". The book was priced at two shillings and sixpence and contained an 8-page section of photographs from the film. It is the first book in the English language to have the word 'grotty' in print. [74] [75]
The book appeared on a 1964 list of "The Year's Best Juveniles" in The New York Times Book Review. [7] One 1965 reviewer called the book "a brilliantly written, unsparing realistic story, a superb portrait of an extraordinary child". [8]